Hello John, Javier, you may get bogus numbers when calculating jitter from phase noise measurements with limited bandwidth. For example what about an asyncronous (deterministic jitter) component sitting at 103KHz when you only measure with a 100KHz bandwidth? Depending on the level of this 103KHz signal the resulting jitter could look horrible on a scope, but would be completely invisible on a 100KHz BW measurement. Such a 103KHz spur may come from switching power supplies etc, and have a detrimental effect on the signal. For example, I have a Wenzel Ultra low noise OCXO which is extremely low noise (around -170dBc/Hz floor) but at the same time it has a large amount of noise at around 620MHz or so. I attribute this noise to the digital CMOS gates they seem to use in the buffer stages, followed by low-pass filters that are not attenuating properly at those high frequencies. It can be easily seen on a spectrum analyzer for example. BTW: I asked Wenzel about this, they said "we see this too, it's probably caused by mixing artifacts in the spectrum analyzer itself". I don't agree since the noise goes away if I use a 50MHz low pass filter on the signal.. Will such higher frequency noise/jitter affect your system? That depends on your systems' requirements. Generally, when measuring jitter it always looks better to measure with a limited bandwidth such as 10MHz or 20MHz as used on PN equipment such as E5052B's etc. To give you an example, I have measured the same 10MHz OCXO source with both a limited 10MHz BW and a ~2GHz bandwidth Wavecrest Jitter Analyzer. The result: Jitter as indicated based on PN measurement: ~350fs rms Jitter as indicated by the Wavecrest: ~8ps rms (noisefloor of <3ps). That's a big difference, and depending on your application could result in a significant increase in your theoretical Bit Error Rate etc. Another item to keep in mind: even if your application has limited bandwidth (say a receiver with only 5MHz IF bandwidth etc) you may get aliasing back into your bandwidth of interest by the mixing of two deterministic noise sources etc. So if your source has noise at say 600MHz due to the 60th overtone of your crystal, and your system happens to have some noise at 603MHz, you may get a signal down at 3MHz in your IF due to the non linearity of the amps etc. In my opinion it is always better to verify PN based jitter measurements with a wide-bandwidth SA and/or wide-bandwidth jitter analyzer rather than just rely on over simplistic PN-to-jitter calculations such as are available online (Wenzel website etc). While they are useful, these may not tell you the entire story. bye, Said In a message dated 10/13/2008 12:26:04 Pacific Daylight Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Normally the PN reaches a broadband floor determined by the circuit's own limitations or its semiconductor process. This happens between 100 kHz and 10 MHz depending on what's generating the signal. So you wouldn't want to extrapolate the slope indefinitely. A high-quality crystal oscillator's broadband floor will be sufficiently quiet (typically better than -160 dBc/Hz) that it won't matter much whether you integrate out to 100 kHz or to 1 MHz. The difference will be on the order of attoseconds. When making the measurement, you'd typically place the upper integration cursor one decade into the broadband-floor region, and call it good. **************New MapQuest Local shows what's happening at your destination. Dining, Movies, Events, News & more. Try it out! (http://local.mapquest.com/?ncid=emlcntnew00000001) _______________________________________________ time-nuts mailing list -- [email protected] To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts and follow the instructions there.
